Reagan administration official to DNC: 'Donald Trump, you are no Ronald Reagan'

A former spokesman and speechwriter for President Ronald Reagan
took the stage at the Democratic National Convention in
Philadelphia on Thursday to rip Donald Trump and denounce any
comparisons between the Manhattan billionaire and the
conservative icon Reagan.

"It's an honor to be here; candidly, it's also a shock," Doug
Elmets said, according to prepared remarks. "Not because of the
momentous nature of this event, or the size of the crowd. It's a
shock because, unlike many of you, I'm a Republican."

He said that he's voted entirely Republican for the past 40 years
— ever since he first cast a ballot.

"I haven't just voted Republican, I worked in President Reagan's
White House," he continued. "I recently led an effort to place a
statue of Ronald Reagan in California's
Capitol."

"I'm here tonight to say: I knew Ronald Reagan; I worked for
Ronald Reagan," he continued. "Donald Trump, you are no Ronald
Reagan."

He contrasted Reagan's famous demand of Russian leader Mikhail
Gorbachev to "tear down" the Berlin Wall with Trump's plan to
build a wall along the US-Mexico border.

"Reagan saw nuance," he said. "Trump sees the world as us vs.
them, where somebody with brown skin or a foreign-sounding name
is likely to blame for our troubles. Reagan knew that a
leader needs diplomacy to steer a safe, prosperous course
forward. Trump is a petulant, dangerously unbalanced reality star
who will coddle tyrants and alienate allies."

Elmets said that he shudders to think where Trump will lead the
country.

But, he added, he doesn't think that Trump will get the
chance.

"While Hillary holds many policy positions that differ from my
own, her qualifications are indisputable," he said, later adding,
"This year's Republican platform is the most alarming I've ever
seen. It's laced with anti-immigrant, anti-gay, anti-women
positions that do not represent the views of most
Americans. That is why this year, I will vote for a Democrat
for the first time."

He made a call to other Republicans to do the same, saying that
"loyalty to country" matters more than "loyalty to party."